Brazil Demand Pushes Job Creation to January Record

Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) — Brazil created a record number of jobs for the month of January, prompting traders to increase bets policy makers may start raising the benchmark interest rate as early as next month to keep inflation in check.

Latin America’s biggest economy created 181,419 jobs last month, led by manufacturers, compared with a loss of 101,748 jobs a year earlier, the Labor Ministry said in a report today in Rio de Janeiro.

Yields on interest rate future contracts maturing May 2010 through July 2011 rose after the report was released. The contract due January 2011, the most traded on Sao Paulo’s BM&F exchange, rose 1 basis point, or 0.01 percentage point, to 10.25 percent at 12:57 p.m. New York time.

“This figure clearly reinforces the view that the economy is expanding at a strong pace,” Pedro Tuesta, senior economist for Latin America at 4Cast Inc., said in a phone interview from Washington. “It increases the odds that the central bank may start raising rates in March.”

According to the median forecast in a central bank survey of about 100 analysts published yesterday, faster economic growth, fueled by domestic demand, will prompt policy makers to raise the benchmark interest rate in April from a record low 8.75 percent for the first time since September 2008 to keep inflation in check.

“Brazil is on track to reach an all-time high in job creation in 2010,” Labor Minister Carlos Lupi told reporters. “If there is an interest rate increase this year, it will be very small,” Lupi said.

Brazilian companies will continue to hire more workers throughout the year, driven by forecasts that the country will post “strong” growth in 2010, Aurelio Bicalho, an economist at Itau Unibanco, Brazil’s biggest non-state bank, said in an e- mailed comment.

Gross domestic product will expand 5.8 percent this year, after growing 0.2 percent last year, according to central bank estimates.

The government-registered job creation number is a balance of posts created minus job dismissals. Registered jobs, or so- called formal work, assure employees a range of benefits such as unemployment insurance, bonuses and retirement payments by the government.

Source: BusinessWeek.

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